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Europe will loan war-torn Ukraine up to $39 billion as part of G7 pledge

Europe will loan war-torn Ukraine up to $39 billion to aid recovery
September 20, 2024
Anna Cooban - CNN

London (CNN) โ€” The European Union will lend Ukraine up to โ‚ฌ35 billion ($39 billion), providing the lionโ€™s share of a $50 billion loan agreed by G7 nations earlier this year.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced the loan Friday in a post on X as part of her visit to Kyiv. โ€œRelentless Russian attacks means Ukraine needs continued EU support,โ€ she wrote, adding that the loan was part of โ€œthe G7 pledge.โ€

โ€œWe are now confident that we can deliver this loan to Ukraine very quickly,โ€ she later said at a press conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv, telling him: โ€œYou will decide how best to use the fundsโ€ฆ And this will free more of your national resources to strengthen then, for example, your military capabilities and to defend yourself against the Russian aggression.โ€

The funds are expected to be delivered to Ukraine by the end of the year.

In June, the Group of Seven, which brings together some of the worldโ€™s largest economies, agreed to collectively loan about $50 billion to Ukraine, using the future windfall profits from Russian assets held in the EU and elsewhere as collateral.

Western nations froze Russiaโ€™s assets in bank accounts located in Europe, the United States and other countries as part of a massive wave of sanctions enacted after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Around two-thirds of Russiaโ€™s frozen assets, or some โ‚ฌ210 billion ($234 billion), sits in the EU, while just $3 billion is located in US banks.

The EU loan still requires approval by the European Parliament and a qualified majority of the blocโ€™s member states.

โ€œIn view of the urgency of the proposal, the Commission will be working โ€ฆ to ensure a swift adoption,โ€ the European Commission said in a press release.

The announcement sends โ€œa clear signal that the burden of rebuilding Ukraine will be shouldered by those responsible for its destruction,โ€ it added.

The funding mechanism stops short of seizing the frozen Russian assets outright. The EU has been worried that such a move would discourage other countries from keeping their assets in the bloc.

Von der Leyenโ€™s visit to Kyiv comes just as the winter heating season starts in Ukraine. Russiaโ€™s bombardments targeted at the countryโ€™s energy infrastructure have intensified in recent months, leaving Ukrainians vulnerable to power outages.

On Thursday, the International Energy Agency said this coming winter will be the โ€œsternest test yetโ€ for Ukraineโ€™s energy system.

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